Physical activity and sedentary behaviour of Bahraini people with type 2 diabetes: A cross-sectional study

Author:

Rajab Ebrahim1ORCID,Wasif Pearl1,Doherty Sally1,Gaynor Declan1,Malik Hani2,Fredericks Salim1,Al-Qallaf Amal1,Almuqahwi Rabab1,Alsharbati Wafa3,Rashid-Doubell Fiza1

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland & Medical University Bahrain, Adliya, Bahrain

2. Mohammed Jassim Kanoo Health Centre, Hamad Town, Bahrain

3. Ministry of Health, Manama, Bahrain

Abstract

Objective Study patterns of physical activity and sedentary behaviour and the influence of demographics and body mass index (BMI) on these behaviours amongst Bahraini adults with type 2 diabetes over 10 weeks using an activity tracker. Method This cross-sectional observational study was conducted at a Bahrain government health centre. Thirty-three Bahraini Arab adults, 30–60 years old, with controlled type 2 diabetes, wore a Fitbit Flex 2TM activity tracker for 10 weeks. Data on age, sex, marital and employment status, education and BMI were collected at the start of the study. Results A total of N = 32 participants completed the study. The average steps per day were 7859 ± 4131, and there were no differences between baseline, week 5 and 10. A third of participants were sedentary, based on a threshold of 5000 steps/day. Females accumulated fewer average daily steps than males (6728 ± 2936 vs. 10,281 ± 4623, p = 0.018). Daily averages for physical activity intensity were as follows: sedentary (786 ± 109 min), light (250 ± 76 min), moderate (9 ± 10 min) and vigorous (12 ± 18 min). Males had higher daily averages versus females for moderate (13 ± 9 vs. 5 ± 9 min, p = 0.018) and vigorous physical activity (21 ± 23 vs. 5 ± 7 min, p = 0.034). 91% of participants wore the device ≥10 h/day. The adherence rate was 79% based on percentage of days the device was worn continuously over 10 weeks. Conclusion Future physical activity interventions should target sedentary and female participants with type 2 diabetes. In addition, we need to understand the facilitators and barriers to physical activity and the physical activity preferences of these two subgroups.

Funder

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland and Medical University Bahrain

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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